Jabari Parker, the No. 1 recruit in the Class of 2013, is listening to his doctors and staying off his fractured foot.

“It’s doing well,” his father, Sonny Parker, told SportsNet New York on Saturday. “He’s staying off of it, which is good. He has the boot. The doctor said stay off of it. He goes to the bathroom with his crutches. He’s not putting any pressure on it.”

Parker, a 6-8 power forward from Chicago, played through the injury in leading Team USA to victory in the Under-17 World Championship last month in Lithuania. He dominated Australia in his limited action in the championship game, scoring 12 points in 14 minutes. Only after he returned home was the fracture diagnosed via an MRI.

“He’s young enough and he doesn’t have to have surgery,” Sonny Parker said Saturday. “If he stays off of it, in a month or two he’ll be back.”

Parker expects to be 100 percent well in advance of Chicago Simeon’s season, which doesn’t begin until December. Parker and Team USA teammate Kendrick Nunn hope to lead Chicago Simeon to a fourth consecutive Illinois state championship next spring. In between, he can focus on his recruitment.

Parker says he hopes to whittle down his 10 finalists -- Kentucky, Duke, Kansas, North Carolina, Michigan State, Stanford, Florida, Georgetown, BYU and DePaul -- in the coming weeks and then begin to take recruiting visits.

“Hopefully in September, that’s the target date,” Sonny told SportsNet on Saturday. “Then, he’s going to take his visits and his trips and hopefully make his decision in the fall. If he’s not really feeling it feeling it, then wait until the spring.

“He has no No. 1 or No. 2, he doesn’t really have a favorite. I told him, ‘You have to make a decision.’ He likes pretty much all those programs. I don’t know if anyone has an advantage or disadvantage. It’s just going to come down to him being comfortable in their system where he can grow and develop and get better. He likes all the programs in his top-10 choices.”